Saturday, December 01, 2007

Indian laws and rapidly changing Society

Almost 3 Crore Cases Pending in Indian Courts.Do you think that Indian laws have failed to keep pace with change ?

Ruggedboyz said...
the fact that their are 3 crore cases pending is not just a mirror that reflects that the judicial system in india hasnt delivered it also is a loss in faith of those thousands who thought that indian judicial system could get justice to them it also signifies the powerful can procastinate things and live a happy life and die their natural deaths but the judicail case still is on in the court sorry state of affair clearly here

Virtualscorpio said...
There can be no denying the fact that Indian laws have failed 2 keep pace wid the changing times. I wud go & add that a lot of things in India have failed 2 keep pace wid the changing times. Yes, we have taken giant strides in IT sector etc, yet basic things wid vast majority of Indians remain primitive.

GussaWaala said...
A key descriptor of a democracy is euql rights and freedom. Just how does a nation provide that without offering justice to its citizen? Think about it...... India need a judicial revolution, not just a reform.

Lionking said...
it indeed sad to note that 3 crores cases are pending in Indian Courts. This can be best seen in the recent advertisement of Plywood, wherein the case of some young people drags on till they become old, and still after that the case is adjourned. the first thing is the lawyers reluctance to get a final verdict on the case, fearing that their Case money would be deprived off them if the case is closed earlier. second, the ignorance of the common people who have not enough knowledge of the legal procedures, and tend to wholly depend on the lawyers, and find that their verdict is being postponed because of the first reason mentioned above. third, not enough Law Staff to deal with the ever increasing cases, and the government giving a blind eye on the matter. fourth, political motives which would like to have the cases drag on instead of complete closure of the cases. fifth, the complexity of the indian laws make it much time consuming process, hence the delay. all the reasons mentioned above do contribute to the adding up of the cases.

Lp said...
Too verbose lawyers, and too many laws, too little jurisprudence....that is my country

Busybee said...
Ofcourse !! no scope fr debate there at all.

Niceguy251 said...
This surely looks very sad state of affairs. What we need is proper analysis. Out of these 3 crores pending cases how many are at which level of courts, how many fall under petty cases category and last but not the least how many have had NO progress for the last six months or more due to non attendance of either party by virtue of taking shelter behind medical or legal excuse. Once this study is done it may be that most of these are either trival cases or manipulated for dates. That is where law needs to change with times to keep pace.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

the fact that their are 3 crore cases pending is not just a mirror that reflects that the judicial system in india hasnt delivered it also is a loss in faith of those thousands who thought that indian judicial system could get justice to them it also signifies the powerful can procastinate things and live a happy life and die their natural deaths but the judicail case still is on in the court sorry state of affair clearly here

Anonymous said...

There can be no denying the fact that Indian laws have failed 2 keep pace wid the changing times.


I wud go & add that a lot of things in India have failed 2 keep pace wid the changing times.

Yes, we have taken giant strides in IT sector etc, yet basic things wid vast majority of Indians
remain primitive.

Anonymous said...

A key descriptor of a democracy is euql rights and freedom. Just how does a nation provide that without offering justice to its citizen? Think about it...... India need a judicial revolution, not just a reform.

Anonymous said...

it indeed sad to note that 3 crores cases are pending in Indian Courts. This can be best seen in the recent advertisement of Plywood, wherein the case of some young people drags on till they become old, and still after that the case is adjourned.
the first thing is the lawyers reluctance to get a final verdict on the case, fearing that their Case money would be deprived off them if the case is closed earlier.
second, the ignorance of the common people who have not enough knowledge of the legal procedures, and tend to wholly depend on the lawyers, and find that their verdict is being postponed because of the first reason mentioned above.
third, not enough Law Staff to deal with the ever increasing cases, and the government giving a blind eye on the matter.
fourth, political motives which would like to have the cases drag on instead of complete closure of the cases.
fifth, the complexity of the indian laws make it much time consuming process, hence the delay.
all the reasons mentioned above do contribute to the adding up of the cases.

Anonymous said...

Too verbose lawyers, and too many laws, too little jurisprudence....that is my country

Anonymous said...

Ofcourse !! no scope fr debate there at all.

Anonymous said...

This surely looks very sad state of affairs. What we need is proper analysis. Out of these 3 crores pending cases how many are at which level of courts, how many fall under petty cases category and last but not the least how many have had NO progress for the last six months or more due to non attendance of either party by virtue of taking shelter behind medical or legal excuse. Once this study is done it may be that most of these are either trival cases or manipulated for dates. That is where law needs to change with times to keep pace.